Questions tagged [pastry]

Pastry dough is made of fat, flour and a thin liquid. It is typically light and flaky with a tender inside.

Pastry dough is made of fat (usually butter), flour, and a thin liquid (usually water), worked together with specific techniques, and shaped into a specific final form. Pastry dough is typically light and flaky with a tender inside.

In place of butter, any fat, such as shortening or lard, may be used. A flavor-enhancing liquid, such as brandy, may be used in place of plain water.

Pastry includes croissants, some pie crusts, danishes, tarts, baklava, pâte à choux, as well as things made with phyllo dough or puff pastry.

Baked goods made from poured batter or constructed via the creaming method (beating sugar into fat creates air bubbles) are not pastry. This includes cake, cookies/UK biscuits, standard doughnuts, waffles, meringues, graham cracker pie crusts and quick-bread style muffins. Please use the and (if applicable) tags for these instead.

Dough made with yeast or little fat is not pastry; this includes bread and rolls. Use the and tag instead.

While a pastry chef is a chef who specializes in desserts, and a pastry shop (pâtisserie) would serve all kinds of sweets, these terms are used in a very broad sense and should not be taken into account when deciding what "pastry" is. For example, a pastry cook may also prepare cakes, but cakes are not literally pastries and do not belong in this tag.

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What is the maximal thickness for choux pastry?

I recently made puff balls. I made pâte a choux, but instead of baking it as small spheres (profiteroles-like) or piping it for eclaires, I shaped it into 3 cm big balls and baked it. They puffed beautifully to more than double their original size,…
rumtscho
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What is the best way to set hot water pastry?

Some hot water pie recipes require the pastry to be moulded into shape and left to dry out and set overnight or up to 24 hours before filling and baking (e.g. Scotch pies). Is it best to leave the pastry open to the air or place it in the fridge?…
Greybeard
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How are you supposed to eat mille feuille?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mille-feuille It doesn't cut nicely for fork and knife. When I tried eating it with my hands like a sandwich, the fillings of cream sploosh and the layers of wafer accordion.
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Hot Water Crust Pastry: effects of different ratio of ingredients?

Based on a comment made here Australian Meat (Chunky steak) Pie: loss of Gravy/Sauce after cooling/freezing - Seasoned Advice (which I thankfully read before it was deleted by a moderator), I have been looking into the making of a Hot Water Crust…
Mark Johnson
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How Does a Hot Water Whipped Pie Crust Work?

First time poster here. I was wondering if someone could help me better understand the science behind a hot water whipped pie crust. I know if someone's never made one, and knew anything about the science of baking, they'd think it was a bad…
Devin
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What are the Purposes of the Types of Meringue that are used for Pastry?

i have seen a lot of recipes, which calls french meringue mostly in spongy cakes in the japanese cheesecake for example and other cake recipes, but for the decoration and filling of them are used another kind of meringue that could be swiss or…
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How to thicken a sour cream-based pastry cream?

I did some research, but can't find the answer to my problem: I need to thicken the cream that I am making for my layered cake. The cream is made of sour cream and sweetened condensed milk. The cream, the way it is - is runny. It is good (and also…
ChrisN
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creme patissiere too solid

I made a try of creme patissiere with 250 ml UHT milk at 1.5% fat (yes, hence I called it a try), two egg yolks, 22g corn starch, 70g sugar and vanilla. Direction as classic. Beat yolks with vanilla seeds and sugar, add starch. Meanwhile warm the…
David P
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Can I make Jachnun in a Dutch oven?

Jachnun is prepared from dough which is rolled out thinly, brushed with clarified butter, rolled up and baked overnight. The preparation calls for a Jachnun pot. Trouble is, I don't own a Jachnun pot, and I don't feel like paying for a pot that I…
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Eggless choux pastry recipe yields paper-thin top, gooey bottom

I'm trying to make eggless choux pastries for an egg-allergic friend (my eventual targets are croques-en-bouche and saint-honorés). I have experience with choux pastry, but I've never made an eggless version. I'm following this recipe at Gretchen's…
Chew
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How do I pick up and move shortcrust pastry dough without breaking it?

Apologies if this is a bit of a newbie question! I have no problem with making, chilling, and rolling my pastry, but for the life of me I can never manage to pick up my pastry without it breaking either due to it's own weight, or getting stuck on…
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How do I cook frozen pastry

I bought it from a farm shop (meadow fresh) as pictured. I know it goes in the oven. But what temperature or duration. Unfortunately it came with no instructions and I forgot to look for some when I bought it. Update: I followed the instructions…
IAmGroot
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What is the best sugar for sweet short crust pastry?

I am reading an American Pastry & Pies cookbook and they say the sugar granules in sweet short crust pastry stabilize it and recommend using granulated sugar. So does this mean the bigger the sugar grains the better? I assume there would be a limit…
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How can I prevent pastry becoming soggy when it has a filling and is stored overnight?

I want to make sausage rolls the night before and store them in the fridge before cooking. I am worried that the sausage meat will make the pastry go soggy. How can I prevent this?
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Uses for thick "country-style" phyllo?

I bought a few boxes of Phyllo (Fillo) that is described as Horiatiko / Country Style - Extra-Thick #10. Extra-thick is definitely relative; it is probably twice as thick as normal phyllo but still paper-thin. The first thing I did with it was to…
Michael Natkin
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